About Me

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Part of the daily maintenance on a reef aquarium is controlling the calcium and alkalinity levels in the water. Calcium is used by reef inhabitants to build their skeletons, and it is also precipitated abiotically (calcium deposits on pumps, heaters, etc). Even though this rate of calcium utilization is fairly slow, it must be replenished to ensure there is always a sufficient supply, and having a very consistent level is beneficial to the inhabitants.

The alkalinity level of the water is a measure of how resistant the pH is to fluctuations. It too must be replenished to keep the pH of the water stable. If you are curious about marine calcium/alklainity, search the web. There is a ton of information available, and it is quite complex and interesting.

There are a few ways to maintain proper calcium and alkalinity levels, but I prefer to use a two-part alkalinity and calcium supplement called B-ionic. My aquarium is 5 gallons, and so it only requires about 1 mililiter of each solution (alk and ca) added each day. The exact amount varies, and the two solutions may need to be dosed in unequal quantities. Well, this gets a little tedious after a while, so I built a device that would slowly add the desired amount of each of the alk and ca solutions over the course of a day:I bought two "syringe pumps" on eBay for under $15 each. The pumps consisted of a leadscrew assembly, split-nut, and holder for the syringe. There was no motor, but I knew that they were originally intended to be run by a clock motor. The speed of the motor was constant, hence the only way to control the dosing rate was by changing the motor or the syringe diameter.

I hacked up the syringe pumps a little, and fitted them with two stepper motors that I got at a surplus store for $17 each. The motors are unipolar (6-wire), 1.8*/step, 24V per phase at 300mA.The motors are mounted to the leadscrews with a short length of Delrin shaft. This allows a necessary amount of flexing, since the motor shaft and the leadscrew are unlikely to perfectly aligned. This is a very low-speed low-torque application, so the strength of the delrin shaft is not an issue.

The motor driver circuitry is built from PN2222A transistors that are wired between the motor windings and circuit ground. Each transistor has a clamp diode and filter capacitor on its collector. Each transistor base is driven by a pin on the Arduino Duemillenove microcontroller board. There are four phases for each motor, so this took a total of eight pins on the Arduino. The Arduino is also connected to a 4x20 LCD screen via 6 pins (4-bit interface). I also wired two potentiometers to the Arduino's analog input pins. The pots are setup as variable voltage dividers between ground and 5V.

The Arduino runs code that reads the positions of the two knobs, translates the positions into timing intervals, and advances each of the stepper motors when its respective time interval has elapsed. I also added code to de-energize the motors 1/2 sec after they have been advanced. In this application, the time between motor steps ranges from 40 seconds to 3 minutes. I tested this power-save feature, and it appears the system has no tendency to push the motor backwards while it is unpowered. Thus, power is only necessary when the motor is moving, and it can be deactivated when it is waiting for the next step.

The circuit and motors are powered by a 20VAC wall transformer. I rectified this with 4 diodes, and used a 7805 to supply 5V to the Arduino and LCD. The motor windings get unregulated DC voltage about 20V, since the load from the LCD's backlight is substantial. The 7805 required a large heatsink for this same reason.

For display purposes, the Arduino code translates the motor timing interval to mililiters/day. Turning the knobs provides a very responsive update of the LCD value. It is easy to set the device with .01 mililiter/day precision, although I doubt the device mechanially has that level of precision.

I calibrated the device by turning the stepper motor a specific number of steps, and used a very sensitive scale to measure the mass of water that was pumped out of the syringe. Later that day, I setup the device running normally with its output directed over a vessel on the scale. I learned that my scale must have an anti-drift feature, as it did not register any mass! Instead, I measured the water with a small syringe, and it came it at 4.75 mL (should have been 5). I am not sure if .25mL evaporated, or if .25mL stuck the sides of the vessel, or if the system is inaccurate. Maybe it's all three. The .25mL discrepency is not too important, since the settings will be tweaked based on water testing results once it is up and running.

I am still testing the system, as I really want to be sure it is stable. If the device malfunctioned and dispensed all of its calcium in one blast, it might kill everything in the aquarium. The code is pretty simple, but the Arduino clock function will rollover every 49 days, and it's difficult to test what will happen at that time.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

This is a joint which would be found on a typical bicycle. I used a 7/8" hole saw mounted in my milling machine to notch the end of a tube. It fits up against another tube of the same diameter. I TIG welded at about 80 amps with a standard #7 gas cup, 15 cfh argon, 1/16" tungsten and rod.

The tube was originally chromed, but I ground the chrome off prior to welding.

After welding, I ground one side of the weld flat. Is this structurally sound? I don't know.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

I built this bouquet of flowers from flat sheets of opaque acrylic plastic. The flower petals were machined on a CNC mill. The flower centers and stems were cut by hand with a hole saw and table saw, respectively. Everything is assembled with TAP quick-setting acrylic cement (similar to Weld-On #3). The label was made on a Brother label printer, and the label edges are actually much less apparent than it seems in this photo.